About Lotto Edge AI
The office Powerball pool started this. Eight coworkers, five dollars each, someone's anniversary date as the Powerball number every week. I'm a data analyst. Four months in, I built a spreadsheet.
Eighteen months later it has frequency tabs, a picks log, and a hit-rate column I update Wednesday and Saturday nights after the draws. Along the way I found out there were AI-based lottery tools: actual platforms, sales pages, algorithms claiming to detect patterns. Bought three. Ran each through at least 30 draw cycles. Logged every suggested pick against actual results. One came in about four percent above baseline over eight weeks. The other two tracked at or below random selection.
Everything on this site comes from that log. Not from a week of testing. Not from what the platform's sales page says. Hit rates, sample sizes, and a note when the data was just flat or inconclusive.
Lottery is negative expected value. An AI tool does not change that. If you're already playing and want to know whether any of these tools do anything real, this site tries to answer that honestly. Most of them don't. One tracked slightly above random over a large-enough sample to be mildly interesting. None of them guaranteed anything, and neither will I.
How the testing methodology works: Kevin Brennan.
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